Posted on 04/28/2002 6:58:29 PM PDT by blam
Breaking News. Fox News is reporting that dozens of tanks and troop carriers are entering Hebron. Helicopter gunships have been observed firing into the city. Please update as news arrives.....
I sense a real disconnect to these two sentances, one right after another. Think about it. Think hard, you might just figure something out if you try...
Got to continue killing them until they stop coming.
Think Clinton and the Republicans. Remember how Clinton and the Democrats repeatedly lied about us and the plans and goals of the Republican Party? Remember how the media reported it blithely, without bothering to refute the accusations with the facts readily available? Remember how we felt victimized by the lies and perfidy of Clinton and the Dems?
Now, replace the Democrats and Clinton, with the Arabs/Palestinians and Arafat. Do you not recognize the difference between the deliberate murder of a 5-year-old girl in her bed on her Sabbath yesterday and the deaths of the children that the Pali terrorists hide behind?
I was walking down the street in Jerusalem the other day when it suddenly occurred to me in the way those obvious thoughts just pop into one's head out of nowhere, that never, in all my life, have I felt more proud to be an Israeli and to be a Jew.
This might sound ironic coming at such a time; a time when the world is frothing at the mouth, flinging every vile name at the Jewish people and the land of Israel, accusing us of crimes they perfected sixty years ago, and terminology that they-those wise, cultured Europeans -- invented because no terms existed in the history of mankind for the barbarity they inflicted on the Jewish people. Holocaust. Concentration Camps. Mass Murder. Nazis. And now, they think they can somehow wipe off their guilt by throwing those terms at the survivors of their brutality and their children.
I was walking down the street, and I thought about the Church of the Nativity, and the old priest who was holding the sheet painted in red with the words :"Help Us" on it. And the way our soldiers took him out and put their arms around him. And the way this old priest faced the cameras and said, with tears in his eyes: "Thank you. They've stolen everything. Our crosses. Everything. Thank you for helping me."
We saw it on Israeli television. I thought about the fifty children that are being held hostage in the Church of the Nativity and about the silence of the Pope, busy dealing with pedophiles, too busy to worry about condemning Muslim terrorists who invade Christianity's holiest shrine and hold priests and children hostage. And about the Israeli soldier that was critically wounded just yesterday by a terrorist hiding in the church, hiding behind those children, that have no food, and little water. A soldier who didn't want to tear gas the place, or shoot back.
I thought about other soldiers in the Israeli army which insisted on going from booby-trapped house to booby trapped house in the terrorist stronghold Jenin they jokingly call a "refugee camp." Home to suicide bombers and bomb belt factories. They wouldn't bomb those houses, and we lost 23 precious sons. Because we didn't want to kill innocent people - if there were any in such a place. Hard to imagine.
I thought about the Muslims in Sudan who kidnap Christian little girls (New York Times, April 23, 2002)and enslave them, beating and raping and selling them as wives to old men. And I thought about Muslims in Saudi Arabia holding telethons to raise money in the billions for suicide bombers who will go on an indiscriminate murder spree all over the world. And I thought about the IDF army spokeswoman who described the army's efforts to get food and medicine to the refugee camps, and how they can get the food inside, but that the Palestinian Authority isn't making any effort at all to distribute it because they are still engaged in planning terror attacks from Arafat's compound, to which Europeans in well-cut suits arrive by the busload daily to pay the mass murderer and war criminal their respects. I suppose, given Europe's history, they feel right at home there.
Jews don't burn mosques, or Churches. We don't target children, or old women. We, despite all that was done to us, and all the hatred we receive, continue to be compassionate, to value justice, and human life. We continue to teach our children to value life, and love other people, and strive towards peace. Our children don't throw stones at Arabs. We don't burn the flags of other countries. We don't refuse to do business with the anti Semites in France, and the Nazi sympathizers in Belgium. Maybe we should, but we don't. We judge each man on his merits, not his nationality or religion. And despite the fact that an Arab tried to kill me and my husband and children only a few weeks ago, I don't hate Arabs. Just terrorists and their supporters.
The other peoples of the world have always seemed better off, stronger, more numerous. They live in lands that stretch out endlessly, and have treasures of oil, iron, gold in their hills, and lush forests and abundant rainfalls and beautiful rivers. But I have never been prouder to say those words in the prayerbook: "Thank you God, for not making us like all the other nations of the world, all the other families on the earth." For they don't have a clue how to cherish what they've been given. How to share it with their own people and with others. And we, in our little, tiny, desert land, care deeply about those among us who are hungry and poor. We don't waste water, and we eat our fruits with a blessing. We glory in the beauty of our tiny Lake Kinneret, and walk along our Mediterranean shore on a summer's afternoon with joyful hearts as we watch the sun set, our minds empty of hatred and plans for killing. Our minds on our family's well-being and the future, a better future for all mankind when they recognize that all the Earth belongs to God, and no one has a God-given right to kill others because they want something they don't have. And that to kill someone who is trying to kill you is a good deed, not an immoral act.
Yes, Mr. Kofi Anan. The whole world can be wrong and the Jews right.. Whether they are ignorant tribesmen spewing hate in tents, or sophisticated newsmen, spewing their hatred and prejudice through sophisticated cable networks and outer space satellites.
All those who join with us and bless us now, at this time, will be blessed. And all those who join our enemies, now, at this time, will be cursed.
I'll bet my life on it.
Thank you God, for making me a Jew, and teaching me your Laws, at this time, and in this place, when so many all over the world have lost their moral bearings and have sunk so low. Thank you for keeping Your promise to Abraham, for bringing me, his descendant, back here thousands of years later. I will try to be worthy of being a Jew, to be worthy of all the good you've showered on me and the Jewish people by giving us back our homeland, and helping us to defeat our enemies, the enemies of all good people everywhere.
SC/7382
28 April 2002
PRESS STATEMENT ON Middle East Situation BY SECURITY COUNCIL PRESIDENT
Following is this evening's press statement on the Middle East by Security Council President Sergey Lavrov (Russian Federation):
The members of the Security Council heard a briefing by the Under-Secretary-General, Kieran Prendergast, on the sending of the fact-finding team to Jenin.
The members of the Council remain firm in their insistence on full implementation of Security Council resolution 1405 (2002). They are concerned at the continued delay in the arrival of the fact-finding team. They strongly support the Secretary-General in his efforts to ensure the immediate deployment of the fact-finding team to Jenin with full cooperation of Israel and the Palestinian Authority. They support, in particular, the Secretary-Generals letters to Ambassador Lancry and Ambassador Al-Kidwa of 27 April.
The members of the Council expect a positive report from the Secretary-General by 29 April.
This position of the members of the Council has been conveyed to Ambassador Lancry today.
* *** *
SEPTEMBER 11, 1975 The Christian village of Beit Millat was attacked. Seven people were killed, and ten were kidnaped. Syrian responsibility
OCTOBER 9, 1975 The Christian village of Tal Abbas-Akkar, in the north of Lebanon was attacked. Fifteen people were killed. The church was burned to provoke a sectarian war between the Lebanese. Syrian responsibility
JANUARY 21, 1976 - The Christian town of Damour in the south of Beirut was attacked. Two hundred and sixty people were massacred. The majority of the victims were women, children, and elderly. Palestinian responsibility
June 1976: U.S. Ambassador, Francis Meloy and two other Americans killed in Lebanon.
JUNE 13, 1976 The town of Shikka in the north of Lebanon was attacked. Thirty people were massacred. Among them were women, children and elderly. Palestinian responsibility
U.S. Ambassador in Lebanon Francis Melloy was assassinated by Palestinian gunmen and the killer was apprehended by Lebanese authorities and jailed. The killer was released by the Lebanese court under pressure by the Palestinians and Syria. The U.S. protested unsuccessfully. Palestinian and Syrian responsibility.
MARCH 16, 1977 The Druze leader Kamal Jumblaat was assassinated along with his bodyguards. Palestinian responsibility
OCTOBER 20, 1978 Tens of young people were killed and others kidnaped from the village Al-Kaa-, in Ras Beirut, and Jdeided el Fakiha. Syrian Secret Service responsibility
JUNE 30, 1978 - The Syrians shelled the Christian area of Beirut for 90 days. The shelling killed and injured hundreds of civilians and destroyed Beirut. Syrian responsibility
Islam is far more violent and aggressive than Christianity. I reject your attempts to make them equivalent.
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